<p>It started five years ago after a young engineer in San Francisco sketched out a quirky little Web tool for telling your friends what you were up to. <br /><br /></p>.<p>It became a bullhorn for millions of people worldwide, especially vital in nations that tend to muzzle their own people.<br /><br />But last week, in a sort of coming-of-age moment, Twitter announced that upon request, it would block certain messages in countries where they were deemed illegal. The move immediately prompted outcry, argument and even calls for a boycott from some users.<br /><br />Twitter in turn sought to explain that this was the best way to comply with the laws of different countries. And the whole episode, swiftly amplified worldwide through Twitter itself, offered a telling glimpse into what happens when a scrappy Internet startup tries to become a multinational business.<br /><br />“Thank you for the #censorship, #twitter, with love from the governments of #Syria, #Bahrain, #Iran, #Turkey, #China, #Saudi and friends,” wrote Bjorn Nilsson, a user in Sweden.<br /><br />Bianca Jagger asked, almost existentially, “How are we going to boycott #TWITTER?”<br />Zeynep Tufekci, an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, took the other side.<br /><br />“I’m defending Twitter’s policy because it is the one I hope others adopt: transparent, minimally compliant w/ law, user-empowering,” she wrote.<br /><br />Twitter, like other Internet companies, has always had to remove content that is illegal in one country or another, whether it is a copyright violation, child pornography or something else. What is different about Twitter’s announcement is that it plans to redact messages only in those countries where they are illegal, and only if the authorities there make a valid request.<br /><br />So if someone posts a message that insults the monarchy of Thailand, which is punishable by a jail term, it will be blocked and unavailable to Twitter users in that country but still visible elsewhere. What is more, Twitter users in Thailand will be put on notice that something was removed: A gray box will show up in its place, with a clear note: “Tweet withheld,” it will read. “This tweet from @username has been withheld in: Thailand.”<br /><br />“We have always had the obligation to remove illegal content. This is a way to keep it up in places where we can,” said Alex Macgillivray, general counsel at Twitter. The majority of Twitter’s 100 million users are overseas and it has several offices abroad working to expand its business and drum up local advertising. <br /><br />Tim Wu, a professor at Columbia Law School and author of “The Master Switch,” said the changes could undermine the usefulness of Twitter in authoritarian countries.<br /><br />“I don’t fault them for wanting to run a normal business,” he said. “It does suggest someone or something else needs to take Twitter’s place as a political tool.”<br /><br />Twitter’s policy of allowing its users to adopt pseudonyms made it particularly useful to many protest organisers in the Arab world, and its chief executive went so far as to call it “the free-speech wing of the free-speech party.”<br /><br />But Wu wondered aloud if the new policy would have allowed Egyptians to organise protests using the service.<br /><br />Twitter insists its new system is a way to promote greater transparency, not less. The company says it will not filter content before it is posted. It will not remove material that may be offensive, only that which it thinks is illegal. And it said it would also try to notify users whose posts had been withheld by sending them an email with an explanation.<br /><br />The company identifies the locations of its users by looking at the Internet Protocol addresses of their computers or phones. But it also allows users to manually set their location or choose “worldwide.” Essentially that is a way to circumvent the blocking system entirely. A user in Syria can simply change her location setting to “worldwide” and see everything.<br /><br />Critics on Twitter surmised that the company had been pressed to adopt country-specific censorship after a major investment by a Saudi prince, a theory that Macgillivray quickly dismissed.<br /><br />Facebook also handles requests to remove content that is illegal in certain countries, although it does not explain what it removes and for what reason. In its search results, Google signals what it is required to redact under a certain country’s law – and in the case of YouTube, a Google product, it can block content country by country.<br /><br />Twitter has followed in Google’s footsteps in another respect. It has opted to post some of the removal requests it receives on Chilling Effects, a site jointly run by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and several U.S. universities. Macgillivray was previously on the legal team at Google and, as a student at Harvard, he worked on Chilling Effects.<br /><br />“We have always tried to let people talk and tweet. That has not been good for despots,” Macgillivray said in response to the criticism. “There is no change in policy. What this does is it strengthens, when we are legally required to, our ability to withhold something and to let people know it has been withheld.” <br />NYT</p>
<p>It started five years ago after a young engineer in San Francisco sketched out a quirky little Web tool for telling your friends what you were up to. <br /><br /></p>.<p>It became a bullhorn for millions of people worldwide, especially vital in nations that tend to muzzle their own people.<br /><br />But last week, in a sort of coming-of-age moment, Twitter announced that upon request, it would block certain messages in countries where they were deemed illegal. The move immediately prompted outcry, argument and even calls for a boycott from some users.<br /><br />Twitter in turn sought to explain that this was the best way to comply with the laws of different countries. And the whole episode, swiftly amplified worldwide through Twitter itself, offered a telling glimpse into what happens when a scrappy Internet startup tries to become a multinational business.<br /><br />“Thank you for the #censorship, #twitter, with love from the governments of #Syria, #Bahrain, #Iran, #Turkey, #China, #Saudi and friends,” wrote Bjorn Nilsson, a user in Sweden.<br /><br />Bianca Jagger asked, almost existentially, “How are we going to boycott #TWITTER?”<br />Zeynep Tufekci, an assistant professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, took the other side.<br /><br />“I’m defending Twitter’s policy because it is the one I hope others adopt: transparent, minimally compliant w/ law, user-empowering,” she wrote.<br /><br />Twitter, like other Internet companies, has always had to remove content that is illegal in one country or another, whether it is a copyright violation, child pornography or something else. What is different about Twitter’s announcement is that it plans to redact messages only in those countries where they are illegal, and only if the authorities there make a valid request.<br /><br />So if someone posts a message that insults the monarchy of Thailand, which is punishable by a jail term, it will be blocked and unavailable to Twitter users in that country but still visible elsewhere. What is more, Twitter users in Thailand will be put on notice that something was removed: A gray box will show up in its place, with a clear note: “Tweet withheld,” it will read. “This tweet from @username has been withheld in: Thailand.”<br /><br />“We have always had the obligation to remove illegal content. This is a way to keep it up in places where we can,” said Alex Macgillivray, general counsel at Twitter. The majority of Twitter’s 100 million users are overseas and it has several offices abroad working to expand its business and drum up local advertising. <br /><br />Tim Wu, a professor at Columbia Law School and author of “The Master Switch,” said the changes could undermine the usefulness of Twitter in authoritarian countries.<br /><br />“I don’t fault them for wanting to run a normal business,” he said. “It does suggest someone or something else needs to take Twitter’s place as a political tool.”<br /><br />Twitter’s policy of allowing its users to adopt pseudonyms made it particularly useful to many protest organisers in the Arab world, and its chief executive went so far as to call it “the free-speech wing of the free-speech party.”<br /><br />But Wu wondered aloud if the new policy would have allowed Egyptians to organise protests using the service.<br /><br />Twitter insists its new system is a way to promote greater transparency, not less. The company says it will not filter content before it is posted. It will not remove material that may be offensive, only that which it thinks is illegal. And it said it would also try to notify users whose posts had been withheld by sending them an email with an explanation.<br /><br />The company identifies the locations of its users by looking at the Internet Protocol addresses of their computers or phones. But it also allows users to manually set their location or choose “worldwide.” Essentially that is a way to circumvent the blocking system entirely. A user in Syria can simply change her location setting to “worldwide” and see everything.<br /><br />Critics on Twitter surmised that the company had been pressed to adopt country-specific censorship after a major investment by a Saudi prince, a theory that Macgillivray quickly dismissed.<br /><br />Facebook also handles requests to remove content that is illegal in certain countries, although it does not explain what it removes and for what reason. In its search results, Google signals what it is required to redact under a certain country’s law – and in the case of YouTube, a Google product, it can block content country by country.<br /><br />Twitter has followed in Google’s footsteps in another respect. It has opted to post some of the removal requests it receives on Chilling Effects, a site jointly run by the Electronic Frontier Foundation and several U.S. universities. Macgillivray was previously on the legal team at Google and, as a student at Harvard, he worked on Chilling Effects.<br /><br />“We have always tried to let people talk and tweet. That has not been good for despots,” Macgillivray said in response to the criticism. “There is no change in policy. What this does is it strengthens, when we are legally required to, our ability to withhold something and to let people know it has been withheld.” <br />NYT</p>